LONDON: Data from patients’ health records should be shared with private firms to improve care using artificial intelligence (AI), the Government is told today. A study sets out how Britain should become a world leader in AI, to deliver benefits ranging from smarter scheduling of operations to hiring on-demand self-driving cars.

Industry experts call for the secure sharing of anonymised data about people’s health and lifestyles – arguing they, as well as well as private technology companies, will benefit. The NHS should use facts and figures from supermarkets, transport organisations and town planning to work out ways to encourage healthier lifestyles, the report says.

However, it also highlights how the NHS is failing to exploit AI through data tie-ups with the likes of Your.MD, which offers “immediate trustworthy healthcare advice” via a mobile phone app.

It quotes Matteo Berlucchi, the firm’s chief executive, who appealed for “access to reliable and consistent data sets of anonymised personal health records” to push forward the project. “We have tried to approach the NHS to see if there was a way to access some of this data but we have struggled to even find the right person to talk to,” he said.

The report, entitled Growing the Artificial Intelligence Industry in the UK, argues the “security challenges” holding up access to health data for AI “can be overcome by agreements”.

However, the recommendation is likely to revive previous controversies over data-sharing of health records, which forced the Government into retreat.

Last year, ministers scrapped the care data plan to link GP records after an outcry over whether the public had been properly informed and given the chance to opt out.

The Department of Health then promised that any new record-sharing system would come with “a single and simple mechanism for individuals to opt out of their data being shared beyond their direct care”.

However, draft plans last month appeared to suggest that even patients who opt out could see their information shared across services covering up to five million people.

Meanwhile, in July, the Information Commissioner criticised an NHS hospital that failed to use an appropriate legal basis to share 1.6 million patient records with Google’s Deepmind AI firm.